I study disease ecology and evolution.

Wesley Hochachaka

I am an ecologist whose research has mostly been on studies of birds’ behavioural ecology, population ecology and evolution. Most of my current work falls under two themes: disease ecology and the interaction between a bacterial pathogen and its songbird host, and the use of citizen science to discover patterns and processes that shape bird species’ distributions. Additionally, I have had the good fortune to work on a series of shorter projects, typically with students or post-docs here at Cornell, on a range of interesting topics. Much of this work involves the analyses of large, pre-existing sets of data.

Two themes have characterized my training and research work: big data and collaboration. I have been working with ever larger data sets from my MSc research, which made use of 5 years of field data for an 18 month MSc thesis because I inherited the field component of a project on which I had started as an assistant, until now where the Lab of Ornithology’s citizen science data contain tens of millions of records. So, while I am an ecologist by training, I have had to become comfortable with the management and analysis of large sets of data.